The WebAssembly streaming APIs used to be enabled, but used to take
buffer sources as their first argument (see #6154 and #7259). This
change re-enables them, requiring a Promise<Response> instead, as well as
enabling asynchronous compilation of WebAssembly modules.
denort is an optimization to "deno compile" to produce slightly smaller
output. It's a decent idea, but causes a lot of negative side-effects:
- Deno's link time is a source of constant agony both locally and in CI,
denort doubles link time.
- The release process is a long and arduous undertaking with many manual
steps. denort necessitates an additional manual zip + upload from M1
apple computers.
- The "deno compile" interface is complicated with the "--lite" option.
This is confusing for uses ("why wouldn't you want lite?").
The benefits of this feature do not outweigh the negatives. We must find
a different approach to optimizing "deno compile" output.
This commit aligns the `fetch` API and the `Request` / `Response`
classes belonging to it to the spec. This commit enables all the
relevant `fetch` WPT tests. Spec compliance is now at around 90%.
Performance is essentially identical now (within 1% of 1.9.0).
This commit aligns `Headers` to spec. It also removes the now unused
03_dom_iterable.js file. We now pass all relevant `Headers` WPT. We do
not implement any sort of header filtering, as we are a server side
runtime.
This is likely not the most efficient implementation of `Headers` yet.
It is however spec compliant. Once all the APIs in the `HTTP` hot loop
are correct we can start optimizing them. It is likely that this commit
reduces bench throughput temporarily.
This commit removes redundant "--reload" args because "util::deno_cmd"
recreates "DENO_DIR".
This commit also fixes ta_reload in integration tests to actually test reload.
Currently if WebSocket is closed without code, it will error
while on Chrome it would close with code 1005 instead.
Co-authored-by: crowlKats <13135287+crowlKats@users.noreply.github.com>